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The Worst Case
American Thinker ^
| 11/13/06
| J.R. Dunn
Posted on 11/13/2006 6:21:57 AM PST by teddyballgame
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...and you thought you were depressed now.
To: teddyballgame
To be fair, McGovern flew 25 missions over Germany in a B-24 during World War Two. He is not a coward. I do call him dead wrong in politics.
2
posted on
11/13/2006 6:25:53 AM PST
by
pabianice
To: teddyballgame
"The danger is that theyll act now just as irresponsibly as they did during earlier crises." It's defined as insanity. Doing the same thing the same way over and over and expecting a different result. The leftists are, have been, and will continue to be unhinged. The evil and the damange they do long outlasts their presence.
3
posted on
11/13/2006 6:26:43 AM PST
by
Enterprise
(Let's not enforce laws that are already on the books, let's just write new laws we won't enforce.)
To: teddyballgame
I just finished reading this article at
The American Thinker and checked to see if it was posted. You're so correct, it is depressing. This clip says it all:
There are peoplethere is no discreet way to put thiswho pulled the lever last Tuesday that began the process of their own deaths.
4
posted on
11/13/2006 6:26:44 AM PST
by
Quilla
To: pabianice
Moreover, to be fair, McGovern did oppose the cutting off of funding that doomed South Vietnam, did he not? I could be wrong. I'm no fan of his at all. He was a disaster. But if I remember correctly, he did at least recognize the bloodbath that would follow.
That says nothing at all about what he may be advising about Iraq. It's not a good sign that the Dhimmis are calling this wraithe back to talk to them. But in fairness, if he did oppose their perfidy on Vietnam in 1974 and 1975, it deserves to be known. If not, then go ahead and rip him to shreds remorselessly.
To: pabianice
Moreover, to be fair, McGovern did oppose the cutting off of funding that doomed South Vietnam, did he not? I could be wrong. I'm no fan of his at all. He was a disaster. But if I remember correctly, he did at least recognize the bloodbath that would follow.
That says nothing at all about what he may be advising about Iraq. It's not a good sign that the Dhimmis are calling this wraithe back to talk to them. But in fairness, if he did oppose their perfidy on Vietnam in 1974 and 1975, it deserves to be known. If not, then go ahead and rip him to shreds remorselessly.
To: Quilla
"I just finished reading this article at The American Thinker and checked to see if it was posted. You're so correct, it is depressing."
What can I say, great minds think alike.
7
posted on
11/13/2006 6:33:30 AM PST
by
teddyballgame
(red man in a blue state)
To: pabianice
"To be fair, McGovern flew 25 missions over Germany in a B-24 during World War Two. He is not a coward. I do call him dead wrong in politics."
Yeah, and Murtha served in the Marines and Jimmy Carter was in the Navy. Just because these people served in the military doesn't mean their judgement can be 100% wrong.
8
posted on
11/13/2006 6:35:15 AM PST
by
teddyballgame
(red man in a blue state)
To: teddyballgame
Actually, this doesn't depress me. The reason for this is that liberalism is what makes Jihidis unmanageable to us. And liberalism will only lose it's hold on our incredibly apathetic and uninformed populace when the Jihadis get their attention through violence that hits home. Then, the rules go away and we can get the job done. At that time, hopefully, a leader will emerge who will be up to the task. Because of liberalism (in both parties) a lot of people world wide and here at home are going to die when it didn't have to be so. It can no longer be helped. What kind of gets me down is that the victor is yet very uncertain. We've been very much weakened.
9
posted on
11/13/2006 6:54:08 AM PST
by
wgflyer
(Liberalism is to society what HIV is to the immune system.)
To: wgflyer
When the jihadists hit us again in the USA {and they will} what will the demonRATS say and do then? We made them mad by not getting out of iraq fast enough.
10
posted on
11/13/2006 7:06:16 AM PST
by
USS Alaska
(Nuke the terrorist savages - In Honor of Standing Wolf)
To: USS Alaska
Simple. Bush is CIC and it will be all his fault. You watch.
11
posted on
11/13/2006 7:14:02 AM PST
by
cinives
(On some planets what I do is considered normal.)
To: teddyballgame
Fifteen years ago, an old, frail an unrepentant George McGovern spoke at the commencement ceremony for my graduating class from law school. I remember his Marxist diatribe as filled with vitriol toward Republicans, religious institutions, and bitterness at our nation's despicable treatment of communist regimes.
This ardent left wing fanatic backed every tactic by the ACLU and NOW gang, thought the media was negligent in saying anything nice about Republicans, and utterly despised the growing popularity of talk radio (especially without the safeguards of the Fairness Doctrine.) Only Josef Stalin was further left than this ideologue who should be a strident bell-weather for the direction the "new" leadership is setting to blow.
12
posted on
11/13/2006 7:19:07 AM PST
by
Thommas
(The snout of the camel is in the tent...)
To: cinives
Simple. Bush is CIC and it will be all his fault. You watch.For the next two years, everything that goes well in the US will be because of the Dem Congress and everything that goes badly will be the President's fault. The leftist DBM is not finished yet. Will W ever learn to stand up to a bully? It has been his biggest failing IMHO.
To: Freee-dame
Same - but his failure to stand up is because he's a lot more liberal than a lot of people here want to think. His presser with Mz Pelosi was just disgusting IMO, and to meet and play kissy face with Reid who called him a loser is just wrong.
14
posted on
11/13/2006 7:47:08 AM PST
by
cinives
(On some planets what I do is considered normal.)
To: Dionysiusdecordealcis
I wonder how much longer it will take before the world realizes that putting faith in a commitment by our country is only good until the next election.
15
posted on
11/13/2006 7:55:39 AM PST
by
ANGGAPO
(LayteGulfBeachClub)
To: Dionysiusdecordealcis
I wonder how much longer it will take before the world realizes that putting faith in a commitment by our country is only good until the next election.
16
posted on
11/13/2006 7:56:01 AM PST
by
ANGGAPO
(LayteGulfBeachClub)
To: Dionysiusdecordealcis
I wonder how much longer it will take before the world realizes that putting faith in a commitment by our country is only good until the next election.
17
posted on
11/13/2006 7:56:05 AM PST
by
ANGGAPO
(LayteGulfBeachClub)
To: Dionysiusdecordealcis
I wonder how much longer it will take before the world realizes that putting faith in a commitment by our country is only good until the next election.
18
posted on
11/13/2006 7:56:11 AM PST
by
ANGGAPO
(LayteGulfBeachClub)
To: Dionysiusdecordealcis
I wonder how much longer it will take before the world realizes that putting faith in a commitment by our country is only good until the next election.
19
posted on
11/13/2006 7:56:13 AM PST
by
ANGGAPO
(LayteGulfBeachClub)
To: Dionysiusdecordealcis
I wonder how much longer it will take before the world realizes that putting faith in a commitment by our country is only good until the next election.
20
posted on
11/13/2006 7:56:13 AM PST
by
ANGGAPO
(LayteGulfBeachClub)
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